
By DAVID AKIN
Saturday, September 14, 2002
– Page F7
It was Master Sergeant William Wright's job in Afghanistan to
teach villagers how to find underground water and dig wells.
He had arrived in March, part of the U.S. Army's 96th Civil
Affairs Battalion. By May, his tour of duty had ended and he had
persuaded his superiors to let him leave a day early so he could
surprise his wife, Jennifer, and their three children at their home
on the Fort Bragg army base near Lafayetteville, N.C.
But when he arrived home, he was surprised to find his wife
sleeping with another man.
Sgt. Wright, who had never been known to act violently, promptly
packed up his things and moved out of the house and into army
barracks. But he returned home, police say, on June 29, and Jennifer
Wright was never seen alive again.
A few weeks later, Sgt. Wright confessed to the strangulation of
his former high-school sweetheart. Jennifer Wright, as it turned
out, was the second of four Fort Bragg wives to be killed by their
husbands in the span of a few weeks.
The killings had a few links. All the couples, say friends and
families, had experienced marital troubles. Three of the four
accused husbands had served in Afghanistan.
But there was another common denominator: Three of the four men,
including Sgt. Wright, had taken mefloquine, a commonly prescribed
anti-malarial medication marketed under the trade name Lariam by
Swiss drug giant F. Hoffman-Roche Ltd.
Roche concedes that Lariam can cause severe neuropsychiatric
disorders, including manic behaviour, acute psychosis with
delusions, and aggressive mood swings, in a very small number of
cases, about one in 10,000. Investigators have not yet concluded
whether Lariam played any role in the Fort Bragg killings, but they
are considering it.
The Canadian Somalia Commission of Inquiry also looked at Lariam
when it investigated the 1993 beating death of a Somali teenager at
the hands of Canadian troops. Many soldiers were given mefloquine
while on duty in Somalia.
The commission, which was shut down prematurely by the federal
government, was unable to sort out the difficult and complex science
of mefloquine and the brain's chemistry. Ultimately, it decided that
it could not say if mefloquine played in the events that led to the
death of Shidane Arone.
But the commission certainly heard from soldiers and army medical
staff that mefloquine provoked numerous psychological side effects
among the troops in Somalia. "Ten patients experienced nightmares. .
. . One patient heard voices and talked to himself. All were
switched to [another anti-malarial agent] with no subsequent
problems," its 1997 report said.
One Canadian army major said that the men in his unit used to
joke that "if you get somebody angry, he's just going to walk into
the old church tower and waste 20 people" and then say, "Oh, sorry,
bad mefloquine trip."
Canadians in Somalia got their weekly dose of mefloquine on
Wednesdays. The U.S. soldiers took their Lariam pill on Tuesdays,
prompting some members of the U.S. forces to dub that day of the
week "Psycho Tuesdays."
Canada's Department of National Defence has been prescribing
mefloquine for its ground soldiers and navy personnel since 1992, a
year before the drug was approved by Health Canada for civilian use.
By all accounts, the Canadian mission in Afghanistan was unmarred by
any incidents like those of the Somalia scandal -- but the troops
did take mefloquine, and some reported strong nightmares and other
psychological oddities.
Armies and mefloquine have grown up together -- like most
anti-malarial drugs, it is the product of army medical research.
Private-sector drug companies rarely initiate malaria research for
the simple reason that there is little money to be made in wiping
out a disease that affects the world's poorest people. But armies
have an incentive to keep their soldiers healthy in the jungle.
"The motivation to pursue research on a malaria vaccine was not
so much altruistic as it was imperial," Robert Desowitz wrote in his
1991 book The Malaria Capers. The malaria parasite was first
discovered by a surgeon in the French army, and it was a surgeon in
the British army who deduced that mosquitoes carried the disease. As
the first great colonial powers of the modern world, the French and
the British deployed significant resources to combat malaria.
But as their global presence faded, the United States filled the
vacuum.
With malaria killing more U.S. soldiers than North Vietnamese
bullets, finding a drug that could protect them become a top
priority for the U.S. Army's medical researchers by the end of the
1960s.
In 1971, scientists at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research
in Baltimore discovered that quinoline-methanol, a chemical cousin
to quinine known as mefloquine, was an excellent chemoprophylactic
(a chemical condom) to shield those who took it from malaria.
The World Health Organization, Roche and the Walter Reed
researchers agreed to jointly develop the drug and, by 1985, Roche
was ready to manufacture it, receiving regulatory approval first in
Europe and then later in North America.
It was seen as an important weapon to combat one of the world's
leading health problems. Malaria infects more than 500 million
people a year and, of those, nearly three million die, according to
the World Health Organization.
But anecdotes of bizarre Lariam-influenced behaviour surfaced
within a few years of the drug's commercial use.
In 1998, a schoolmaster in England stole £36,000 of school-trip
money and then blamed the side effects of Lariam for his aberrant
behaviour. Vanessa Brunt, who her family said was a healthy and
happy 22-year-old student at Cambridge University, committed suicide
in 1999 after receiving doses of Lariam. And this year, a former
Democratic Congressman in Philadelphia was charged with defrauding
friends and supporters of $10-million (U.S.). He told the judge in
the case that he couldn't tell right from wrong because of the side
effects of Lariam.
Even as early as 1993, H. A. H. Mashaal, the World Health
Organization's senior malariologist from 1957 to 1982, put out the
call for a broad review of mefloquine's use and related adverse
effects.
But all of this doom and gloom about mefloquine is, according to
some researchers, nothing more than the media's uninformed
overreaction.
Last year, a group of Canada's top malaria and infectious-disease
researchers wrote in the Canadian Medical Association Journal that
"real and perceived intolerances to mefloquine have received
substantial and occasionally irresponsible coverage in the Canadian
media. As a result, many Canadian travellers refuse to take
mefloquine, even when it is clearly the most appropriate choice."
They say mefloquine can be a literal lifesaver in certain parts
of the world. Roche, too, is standing by its product, although it
mailed out warnings this year to U.S. health-care practitioners in
which it spelled out some of the potential neuropsychiatric
reactions.
As for Master Sergeant William Wright, he remains in jail in
North Carolina and faces a trial in the killing of his wife.
Prosecutors are sure to point to a jealous husband who strangled his
wife in a fit of rage. His lawyer, though, may dust off a pile of
scientific studies and point the finger at one of the world's most
popular anti-malarial drugs.
Anti-malaria arsenal
Experts say it is vitally important that anyone who travels to a
region where there is a risk of malaria talk to their doctor well
before travelling, usually six to eight weeks. There is no one drug
that is suitable for all, nor is there there a malaria vaccine,
though researchers at Oxford University began testing a potential
one this summer in Gambia. This list contains the drugs' generic
names, followed in brackets by trade names.
Chloroquine (Aralen). For more than 40 years, this has been
the most widely used anti-malarial drug. As a result, though,
malaria parasites in African and some parts of Asia are now
resistant to it.
Mefloquine (Lariam). Now recommended as the first defence by
Health Canada, the World Health Organization and the U.S. Centers
for Disease Control. Has been a source of controversy due to its
rare neuropsychiatric side effects (see main story). Highly
effective in sub-Saharan Africa. Less so in some parts of southeast
Asia.
Doxycyline (Vibramycin or Doryx). Generally now the choice
for a patient who is unable to take chloroquine or mefloquine. Not
suitable for pregnant or breast-feeding women, or for young
children.
Atovaquone plus proguanil (Malarone). Only recently licensed
in Canada, it is as effective as mefloquine and has significantly
fewer side effects, but is a significantly more expensive drug.
Primaquine. Somewhat less effective than first-line drugs.
Also requires a special blood test before it can be prescribed.
Not recommended
These drugs are no longer sanctioned in Canada, but travellers may
see them sold in other countries.
Proguanil (Paludrine). Not recommended for malaria protection
by Health Canada.
Pyrimethamine plus sulfadoxine (Fansidar). No longer
available in Canada because it can cause severe skin reactions.
Sources: Health Canada; Dr. Jay Keystone, Toronto General
Hospital's centre for travel and tropical medicine; The Globe and
Mail
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